Turkey’s abuse of its anti-terror laws and the significance of the ECHR’s Demirtaş Judgment
On 22
December 2020, the Grand Chamber (GC) of the European Court of Human Rights
delivered a landmark judgment on the application of Selahattin Demirtaş, the
imprisoned politician and former co-chair of the People’s Democratic Party
(HDP).
The judgment
is seminal in many respects and worthy of careful consideration. This article
looks at the Grand Chamber’s determination on Turkey’s main anti-terror
provision, namely Article 314 of the Turkish Penal Code;
“1. Anyone who forms or leads an armed organisation with
the purpose of committing the offences listed in the fourth and fifth parts of
this chapter shall be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of ten to fifteen
years.
2. Anyone who joins an organisation referred to in the
first paragraph of this Article shall be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of
five to ten years.
3. The other
provisions governing the forming of an organisation for criminal purposes shall
also apply in this context.”
Mr Demirtaş,
like hundreds of thousands of others, was detained under Art. 314, and
eventually convicted for terrorist activity. Since 2013, the Turkish Government
has increasingly been using Article 314 to prosecute those it perceives to be members
of certain groups or critical of its policies. According to the latest data,
between 2013 and 2019, 392,176 individuals have been charged and 220,000 have
been convicted under Article 314. There has been a dramatic increase in such
charges with more than 80% of them taking place after the 2016 coup attempt.
Neither the
Penal Code nor the Anti-Terrorism Law contain a definition of an armed
terrorist organization or the offence of membership to one, which makes these
articles prone to arbitrary application and abuse. Although the Court of Cassation have on
different occasions tried to remedy the absence of a legal definition, its
inconsistent approach and apparent pandering to the executive made an already
bad situation worse. As the judiciary is increasingly subjugated under the
executive, the question of who may be deemed a terrorist is determined by the
political currents of the time.
The ECHR, in
the cases of Isikirik v Turkey (2017) and Imret v Turkey (2018), established
that the subsidiary anti-terror provision, namely Art. 220 § 6-7 of the Penal
Code did not afford legal protection against arbitrary interference with
Article 11, right to freedom of assembly and association, as it did not provide
legal certainty and was therefore not “foreseeable”.
In Parmak
& Bakir (2019), the ECtHR dealt with Art. 314 § 2 in terms of amendments
made to the Anti-Terror Law (no:3713) between 2013 and 2017. In that judgment,
the Court first held that “the essence of the offence of membership of a
terrorist organization is to join an association goal and mode of operation of
which was to resort to the criminal use of force, violence and mass
intimidation in order to advance certain political or ideological causes. (And)
.. actual violence, or the intent to use such violence, is central to the
definition of the offence (Parmak &
Bakir § 68).”, the Court then went on to say that Turkey’s domestic courts had
unjustifiably extended the reach of the criminal law to the applicant’s case in
contravention of the guarantees of Article 7.
Although the
Parmak & Bakir judgment has been quite significant, it did not pertain to
the right to security and liberty or freedom of expression, but the
implications and uncertainties caused by the amendments made to the anti-terror
legislation.
In the case
of Demirtas (2), the ECHR examined Art. 314 with regard to the legality of the interference
into Arts. 5 and 10 of the Convention.
Article 10 of
the Convention and Art. 314 of the Turkish Penal Code
The Grand
Chamber (GC) of the European Court of Human Rights applied its quality of law
test to the Art. 314 of Penal Code. The GC by also referring to the Venice
Commission’s opinion that “the domestic courts often tended to decide on a
person’s membership of an armed organisation on the basis of very weak
evidence” held that “the range of acts that may have justified the applicant’s
pre-trial detention in connection with serious offences punishable under
Article 314 of the Criminal Code is so broad that the content of that Article,
coupled with its interpretation by the domestic courts, does not afford
adequate protection against arbitrary interference by the national
authorities.” Consequently, the GC concluded the interferences with the
applicant’s freedom of expression under Art. 314 did not comply with the
requirement of the quality of law, and therefore constituted a violation of
Article 10.
Article 5 § 1
of the Convention and Art. 314 of the Turkish Penal Code
The GC,
having established the violation of Art. 10 of the Convention and with specific
reference to the Venice Commission’s above-mentioned opinion, held that “the
range of acts that could have justified the applicant’s pre-trial detention
under Article 314 of the Criminal Code was so broad that the content of that
provision, coupled with its interpretation by the domestic courts, did not
afford adequate protection against arbitrary interference by the national
authorities. On that account, it found that the terrorism-related offences at
issue, as interpreted and applied in the present case, were not “foreseeable”.
Consequently, the GC concluded there had been a violation of Article 5 § 1 of
the Convention.



